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-1.221133 | -1.869561 | 34 | The brute force computational approach will not resolve the
outstanding problems in disk galaxy formation. What seems to be
needed are further analytical insights that will allow
refinement of the simple prescriptions for star formation. One
such approach has come from studying turbulence-driven viscous
evolution of differentially rotating disks. Recent
investigations of star formation suggest that turbulence plays
an important role in accounting for the longevity of star-
forming clouds and their fragmentation into stars. The Jeans
mass in a typical interstellar cloud greatly exceeds the stellar
mass range. It is likely that the gravitational instability of
galaxy disks is a primary source of interstellar cloud turbulent
motions, supplemented on small scales by supernova feedback. Of
course, these drivers of turbulence are coupled together, since
the rates of star formation and star deaths are controlled by
global gravitational instability. In effect, differential
rotation is the ultimate source of the turbul |
3.0194 | 6.445207 | -1 | From Sturgis to Walled lake, Greenville to Grosse Pointe—an
increasing number of school's are seeing tablet computers as a
way to engage students and boost test scores. However, as
history seems to show, improvement for one group of people is
often predicated on the underdevelopment of another. (The wealth
of many modern-day Western countries came as a direct result of
slavery.) Thousands of k-12 students are gaining access to new
technologies and the fleeting exhilaration that comes with
novelty. But what's the real cost of producing tablet computers
like Apple iPad's? While covering the story for CNS, I couldn't
shake the thought that while many school teachers champion the
sleek-looking tablets as the future of teaching, those producing
them work in conditions that few American citizens would ever
consent to. The tablets are made in China, many of which at
Foxconn, an electronic manufacturing company that produces more
than 40 percent of the world's electronics. Foxconn has gained a
reputation of having de |
5.844017 | -1.964632 | -1 | Scientists use the word instinct to define animals' inborn
behaviors. Always left unanswered, however, are the questions of
how these instinctive behaviors first appeared, and how animals
developed these instincts and passed them down through later
generations. In his book, The Great Evolution Mystery,
evolutionist and geneticist Gordon Rattray Taylor admits this
logical dead end: When we ask ourselves how any instinctive
pattern of behaviour arose in the first place and became
hereditarily fixed, we are given no answer... i Some
evolutionists, who do not admit this dilemma as Taylor does, try
to pass over such questions with vague rhetoric of no specific
meaning. According to the theory of evolution, instinctive
behaviors are coded in the genes. According to this rationale,
bees build their extraordinary and mathematically precise combs
because of their instincts. In other words, Someone must have
programmed into the genes of all the bees on Earth the instinct
of how to construct regular six-sided combs. If |
1.896798 | 5.716106 | 18 | Whether it’s pupils calling for no school uniform, or
professionals delivering a business proposal - the power of
persuasion is a vital tool throughout our lives. Help students
to win friends and influence people with these hand-picked
persuasive writing resources. - Help pupils persuade local
people to be good citizens with this TES iboard interactive
leaflet writer. - Hear young pupils and adults discuss 5 key
topics in this video - great inspiration to encourage pupils to
be persuasive. - Practise persuasive techniques by banishing
dislikes to Room 101 in this outstanding graded lesson. - Help
pupils to understand sustainable fishing issues while they
develop their persuasive style in this resource pack from
National Schools Partnership. - Adopt a persuasive tone and help
pupils develop their literacy confidence with this big writing
frame. - Concise, clear and colourful - this simple A4 sheet
tells pupils what they need to do to achieve levels 4c- 5c in
their work. - Simple checklist for self- and peer-as |
1.110162 | 2.068378 | -1 | 1874 foreclosure law took heavy farm toll When historian Robert
Stauffer started sifting through thousands of pages of old
documents that a trust company clerk had saved from the trash
bin, he knew he had come across an information gold mine. It
just wasn't clear at the time how valuable the find would be.
It's clear now. Based on those documents, many of them written
in Hawaiian, Stauffer produced ground-breaking research that is
detailed in his new book, "Kahana: How the Land Was Lost." The
book basically exposes the major role that an obscure but
controversial mortgage foreclosure law played in the widespread
loss of lands by native Hawaiians in the late 1800s and early
1900s. DENNIS ODA / DODA@STARBULLETIN.COM| Ron Johnson and
Robert Stauffer enjoy the view in Kahana Valley. Ron hand-
cleared the area below to raise taro as did his family before
him. Stauffer's new book uses previously unexamined documents to
detail how an 1874 state law facilitated the loss of native
Hawaiian land. It's a state law that s |
0.264615 | 0.585402 | -1 | Acosta, A. J. (1973) Hydrofoils and hydrofoil craft. Annual
Review of Fluid Mechanics, 5 . pp. 161-184. ISSN 0066-4189
http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechAUTHORS:ACOarfm73 See Usage
Policy. Use this Persistent URL to link to this item:
http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechAUTHORS:ACOarfm73 At the
present time several hundred hydrofoilcraft are in service
throughout the world. The upsurge in the use of these craft did
not really begin until the late 1950s, although fascination with
the idea of supporting small boats with underwater wings dates
well back into the nineteenth century. About the turn of the
century, hydrofoil flight was achieved, to be followed in a few
years by Bell and Baldwin who, at the close of World War I,
achieved the modern hydrofoil speed of 60 knots in a very novel
craft. Progress and interest in this form of transportation then
waned for many years. There were some interesting developments
just prior to and through World War II in Europe, and after the
war interest quickened in several co |
10.302105 | 4.285198 | 190 | Urinary Tract and Kidney Infections A urinary tract infection
(UTI) is a very common medical complication of pregnancy. Unless
treated, a UTI can cause serious problems in pregnancy. Normal
urine is sterile. It contains fluids, salts, and waste products,
but is free of bacteria, viruses, and fungi. The tissues of the
bladder are isolated from urine and toxic substances by a
coating that discourages bacteria from attaching and growing on
the bladder wall. The main parts of the urinary tract are: Two
kidneys. A pair of purplish-brown organs located below the ribs
toward the middle of the back. Two ureters. Narrow tubes that
carry urine from the kidneys to the bladder. Bladder. A
triangle-shaped, hollow organ located in the lower abdomen. Two
sphincter muscles. Circular muscles that help keep urine from
leaking by closing tightly like a rubber band around the opening
of the bladder. Urethra. The tube that allows urine to pass
outside the body. Click Image to Enlarge Pregnancy and urinary
tract infections During |
1.955478 | 8.453186 | -1 | What Time is it? Sometimes measuring time in millisecond
resolution just isn’t accurate enough. Together with industry
and community leaders, the W3C Web Performance working group has
worked to solve this problem by standardizing the High
Resolution Time specification. To solve this issue, the High
Resolution Time specification defines a new time base with at
least microsecond resolution (one thousandth of a millisecond).
To reduce the number of bits used to represent this number and
to increase readability, instead of measuring time from 01
January, 1970 UTC, this new time base measures time from the
beginning of navigation of the document,
performance.timing.navigationStart. This time base is also
different in that it is monotonically increasing and not subject
to clock skew or adjustment. The difference between subsequent
calls to performance.now() will never be negative. The
specification defines performance.now() as the analogous method
to Date.now() for determining the current time in high
DOMHighResTim |
1.61288 | 7.688502 | 31 | For example, the roots of any quadratic equation with complex
coefficients can be expressed in closed form in terms of
addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, and square root
extraction, all elementary functions. However, there are quintic
equations without closed-form solutions using elementary
functions — see Galois theory. Changing the definition of "well-
known" to include additional functions can change the set of
equations with closed-form solutions. Many cumulative
distribution functions cannot be expressed in closed form,
unless one considers special functions such as the error
function or gamma function to be well-known. It is possible to
solve the quintic equation if general hypergeometric functions
are included, although the solution is far too complicated
algebraically to be useful. For many practical computer
applications, it is entirely reasonable to assume that the gamma
function and other special functions are well-known, since
numerical implementations are widely available. |
0.813419 | 1.904932 | 12 | South Carolina – Indians, Native Americans – Keyauwee South
Carolina SC Native Americans SC Indian Tribes SC Keyauwee
Indians - Alternate spellings: Keyawee, Kewawee, Keiauwee,
Keeowee, Keeowaw, Keeawawe - Possible meanings: Unknown -
Language family: Presumed to be Siouan SC Location, Territory -
Traditional: On the Great Pee Dee River, near the border between
North Carolina and South Carolina in Chesterfield and Marlboro
counties - 1600: 500 - 1701: 150 (one village) - In 1701, the
Keyauwee were found living in a palisaded village near High
Point, North Carolina. Their chief was Keyauwee Jack, a Congaree
who had obtained the chieftaincy by marrying the Keyauwee's
"queen." - Moved eastward to the Albemarle Sound area of
Virginia in 1702, along with at least four other small tribes
including the Cheraw. - Settled along the North Carolina portion
of the Pee Dee River after 1716, possibly uniting with the
Catawba. - Moved southwestward with the Cheraw to Greater Pee
Dee River area near the North Carolina and So |
1.719776 | 7.57933 | 31 | Two trees 20 metres and 30 metres long, lean across a passageway
between two vertical walls. They cross at a point 8 metres above
the ground. What is the distance between the foot of the trees?
The equation a^x + b^x = 1 can be solved algebraically in
special cases but in general it can only be solved by numerical
methods. In this short problem, try to find the location of the
roots of some unusual functions by finding where they change
sign. |
-0.414826 | -1.743799 | 93 | For Release: April 2, 2009 WASHINGTON-- A collection of NASA
missions will be involved in a live event April 3 that will
allow the public to get an inside look at how these missions are
run. "Around the World in 80 Telescopes" is a 24- hour webcast
that is part of the "100 Hours of Astronomy" event for the
International Year of Astronomy 2009. During the webcast,
viewers will be able to visit some of the most advanced
telescopes on and off the planet. For NASA's space-based
missions, the webcast will be broadcast from control centers
throughout the United States. To view the webcast, visit: As
part of the webcast, each mission will release a never-before-
seen image from the telescope or observatory. The new images can
be found on the websites listed below. Please note these times
correspond to the beginning of each mission's segment on the
live webcast and when each new image will be available. The NASA
missions participating in the Webcast, in chronological order,
are (times EDT, April 3): Hubble Space Teles |
-0.680193 | 1.573632 | -1 | The battle of Langemarck, 21-24 October 1914, was part of the
wider first battle of Ypres (19 October-22 November). It began
as an encounter battle, between troops of the British I corps
and German troops, both advancing to make an attack. It ended
with the Allies on the defensive around Ypres, holding off the
first of a series of fierce German attacks that would be typical
of the remained of the battle of Ypres. At the end of 20 October
the two divisions of I corps were separated by Ypres. Sir John
French ordered the corps to move to Langemarck and then launch
an attack to the north, with the ambitious aim of liberating
Bruges. French believed that there was only one German army
corps north of Ypres, when there were actually five between
Ypres and the coast. The start of the British attack was delayed
by the time needed for the two divisions of I corps to reach
Langemarck. Some progress was made, before the advancing British
began to encounter an increasing number of German troops, also
advancing to the atta |
5.357721 | 3.243131 | -1 | TEMPE, Ariz. – A team of researchers at Arizona State University
has demonstrated the ability to move water molecules by light --
a phenomenon they believe could have widespread use in
analytical chemistry and possibly pharmaceutical research. The
discovery could have an important effect on the fledgling field
of microfluidics, said Tony Garcia, an associate professor in
the Harrington Department of Bioengineering. The use of an
ordinary beam of light to move water around without the need for
potentially damaging electric fields, air bubbles (which can
denature proteins), or moving microscopic mechanical pump parts
(which are expensive to make and difficult to repair) could
significantly aid development of microfluidic devices, which are
themselves tiny, sophisticated devices that can analyze samples.
"This discovery can speed the development of microfluidic
devices," Garcia said. "These devices could require only one
drop of blood for a battery of 20 to 30 tests, with results
provided in the time spent waiti |
5.320138 | 2.156595 | 118 | As fire professionals, we continually strive to improve the
level of safety for our customers and fellow fire professionals.
Fire professionals who have the task of suppression look for
ways to improve the level of safety when they are called to
fight a fire. This may range from improving firefighter safety
through the use of the latest personal protection equipment,
conducting pre-incident surveys of the occupancies in their
districts and risking their lives for another. Those
professionals assigned to fire prevention, look to improve
safety to citizens and fire fighters through fire and life
safety education, fire protection engineering, fire inspections,
and code enforcement. But we must ask, are we really making an
impact? What can be done to actually improve firefighter safety,
decrease fire deaths and improve the overall level of fire
protection in the community which we serve? Let us look at the
big picture and link it to our community. Where are most of the
people dying from fire? The answer is the sa |
-1.46205 | 2.609159 | -1 | When leaders from Liberal, Progressive and Reform congregations
in Europe, North America and other parts of the world gathered
in Berlin in August 1928 to convene the first World Union for
Progressive Judaism international conference, little could they
have imagined that in less than a century the World Union would
become the largest Jewish religious movement in the world, with
over 1.7 million constituents in 42 countries. Two years
earlier, in 1926, the World Union had been established in
London, under the dynamic leadership of Lily Montagu, its
honorary secretary, and Claude Montifiore, its first president.
The mandate of the newly formed organization was to unite into a
permanent Union the various progressive Jewish movements already
in existence in various countries of the world, and to establish
a movement presence wherever there were Jewish communities
prepared and committed to undertake such a challenge. There is
little wonder that the World Union’s first international
conference took place in Berlin. |
8.557234 | 4.958702 | -1 | This article was originally distributed via PRWeb. PRWeb,
WorldNow and this Site make no warranties or representations in
connection therewith. SOURCE: The Mount Sinai Medical Center
Researchers at Mount Sinai School of Medicine have validated new
genetic links for sagittal craniosynostosis, a common birth
defect in which the bones that form the sides and top of the
skull, fuse prematurely. New York, NY (PRWEB) November 18, 2012
Researchers at Mount Sinai School of Medicine have validated new
genetic links for sagittal craniosynostosis, a common birth
defect in which the bones that form the sides and top of the
skull, fuse prematurely. The genome-wide association (GWA) study
and replication, published online November 18th in the journal
Nature Genetics, provides the first strong evidence of genetic
variants contributing to non-syndromic sagittal
craniosynostosis. Craniosynostosis is one of the ten most common
birth defects, occurring in about 1 out of every 2,500 live
births. The sagittal form of craniosynost |
-0.079882 | 0.732284 | 2 | 2012 marks one hundred years since the sinking of RMS Titanic.
The Titanic sank over the course of two and three quarter hours
on the night of April 14-15 1912, with the loss of over 1,500
lives. Before the accident, Titanic was billed as a practically
unsinkable ship and at the pinnacle of modern ship building and
engineering techniques. Among its many outstanding features were
four electric elevators for passengers, over 10,000 electric
lamps and dimming light switches in first-class state rooms.
This vast array of new and exciting advances in electrical
engineering led an anonymous engineer to submit a four-page
academic paper to the journal, The Electrician, in 1911, just a
few months before the fateful voyage. The full paper is indexed
in the IET’s engineering database, Inspec. Titanic also utilised
the state of the art 5-kW Marconi wireless set, the most
powerful in use at the time, with a guaranteed operating range
of 250 miles. Sadly the radio operators did not fully take heed
of the messages from oth |
6.598565 | -0.709366 | 28 | It's illegal to buy, sell or plant purple loosestrife, and It's
banned in nurseries and farmer's markets. The native perennial
fireweed produces spikes of magenta flowers July through
September. All bindweeds have arrow shaped leaves on long stems,
and their underground rhizomes are hard to dig up. These tall
perennial wildflowers can be seen growing in moist pasture lands
and on the banks of streams and rivers from southern Canada to
Texas. The leaves and rhizomes of saponaria officinalis can be
boiled in water to make a soapy lather. What is there not to
like about a pretty, serviceable and deer-resistant plant that
endures hot, dry conditions? It is hard to beat achillea,
commonly called yarrow, in a hot dry garden site. There are over
900 species of salvias, and it is the largest genus in the mint
family. |
8.215123 | 3.173878 | -1 | A “risk factor” is anything that increases your risk of
developing breast cancer. Many of the most important risk
factors for breast cancer are beyond your control, such as age,
family history, and medical history. However, there are some
risk factors you can control, such as weight, physical activity,
and alcohol consumption. Be sure to talk with your doctor about
all of your possible risk factors for breast cancer. There may
be steps you can take to lower your risk of breast cancer, and
your doctor can help you come up with a plan. Your doctor also
needs to be aware of any other risk factors beyond your control,
so that he or she has an accurate understanding of your level of
breast cancer risk. This can influence recommendations about
breast cancer screening — what tests to have and when to start
having them. Risk factors you can control Weight. Being
overweight is associated with increased risk of breast cancer,
especially for women after menopause. Fat tissue is the body’s
main source of estrogen after m |
0.724137 | 3.469666 | 20 | Many people may know the Finger Lakes as a choice vacation spot.
But, did you know that it also is home to a remarkable amount of
U.S. history? Read on to learn about some of the important
history that took place in the Finger Lakes, and how to visit
representations of these bygone eras today. Women’s Rights
Movement The women’s rights movement had some of its earliest
roots in Seneca Falls, a now-historic village located in the
central part of the Finger Lakes. In 1848, Elizabeth Cady
Stanton, Lucretia Mott, and other local women organized the
Seneca Falls Women’s Rights Convention. Stanton drafted a
Declaration of Sentiments to guide the meeting, which included
the radical notion that women ought to fight for the right to
vote. There are many places to experience this proud heritage,
including the National Women’s Hall of Fame, the Seneca Falls
Historical Society, and Seneca Falls Heritage Area Visitor
Center. After the Women’s Rights Convention, Stanton began
working extensively with Susan B. Anthony to ca |
0.999056 | 1.491945 | 12 | The debate over the term “Oregon” has been ongoing for over a
century. Most scholarship ascribes its first known use to a 1765
manuscript petition by Major Robert Rogers to the King of
England’s Privy Council requesting financing for an expedition
to discover a river based “Northwest Passage” from the Great
Lakes to the Pacific. Variants later appear in Jonathan Carver’s
1778 Travel’s Through the Interior Parts of North America.
Carver was an associate of Rogers from whom he no doubt derived
the term. Modern scholars have delved deeper into the term
associating it with various American Indian languages. The most
recent scholarship on this subject by anthropologist Ives
Goddard and linguist Thomas Love (Oregon Historical Quarterly,
Vol. 105, No. 2 (Summer, 2004), pp. 238-259) traces the
etymological root of “Oregon” to Abenaki term “wauregan” meaning
“good” or “beautiful”. The Abenaki (and later the French in the
form of Le Page’s Map), with whom Rogers was intimate, used this
term to refer to the Ohio River – |
1.785843 | 0.178258 | -1 | FMNH Collection Data: Classification: Enstatite chondrite (EL6)
Specimen number: FMNH ME 1979 Specimen mass: 390.59 gram The
Blithfield meteorite was found in 1910 in Renfrew County,
Ontario. The only sample from the find weighs 1.830 kg. The
Blithfield meteorite is an enstatite chondrite that belongs to
the low-iron chemical group and was thermally metamorphized in
its parent body. It is classified as an EL6 chondrite.
Image/animation: © 2011 The Field Museum. |
10.282131 | 2.477329 | -1 | Oral thrush is a very common infection in infants that causes
irritation in and around a baby's mouth. It is caused by the
overgrowth of the yeast (a type of fungus) called Candida
albicans. Candida overgrowth can lead to vaginal (yeast)
infections, diaper rashes, or oral thrush. Most people
(including infants) naturally have Candida in their mouths and
digestive tracts, which is considered normal growth. The amount
is controlled by a healthy immune system and some "good"
bacteria. If the immune system is weakened (due to an illness or
medicines like chemotherapy), or if the immune system is not
fully developed as is the case in infants, the Candida in the
digestive tract can overgrow and lead to an infection. Sometimes
Candida overgrowth occurs after a baby has received antibiotics
for a bacterial infection, because antibiotics can kill off the
"good" bacteria that keep the Candida from growing. Similarly,
infection can occur with the steroid use. Oral thrush can affect
anyone, although it's most common in i |
1.797125 | 5.762786 | 18 | view a plan “All Eyes on the Pond” Language Arts, Science Title
– Life in a Pond By – Karen Secules Primary Subject – Science
Secondary Subjects – Language Arts Grade Level – 3rd Grade
Lesson Plan Title: Life in a Pond – a Web Enhanced Lesson
Concept / Topic To Teach: Language Arts/Science (Pond Life)
Standards Addressed: (Pennsylvania Standards) 1.1.3-F —
Understand the meaning of and use correctly new vocabulary
learned in various subject areas. 1.1.3-G — Demonstrate after
reading understanding and interpretation of both fiction and
nonfiction text; retell or summarize the major ideas, themes or
procedures of the text. 1.2.3-A —Read and understand essential
content of informational texts and documents in all academic
areas; make inferences from text when studying a topic (e.g.,
science, social studies) and draw conclusions based on text.
1.2.3-B —Use and understand a variety of media and evaluate the
quality of material produced; use electronic media for research.
1.3.3-F — Read and respond to nonfiction an |
3.324304 | 5.174254 | -1 | A Fan of Caltech Over the coming weeks, we’ll be highlighting
several undergraduates and their summer research at Caltech.
Some are Techers; others hail from schools across the country.
Most are participating in the Summer Undergraduate Research
Fellowships (SURF) program, a unique opportunity for
undergraduates to spend 10 weeks over the summer doing original
research with Caltech faculty. At the end of the project,
students write a paper and present their work at SURF Seminar
Day, which will take place on October 15 this year. When summer
started, Caltech senior Yuyang Fan was handed a picture taken
with a cell phone. The image showed a large box with an array of
small fans covering one side. It was a wind tunnel—a simple one,
but a wind tunnel nevertheless. Fan's mission? To build one
himself as part of his SURF project. And the catch? Other than
the picture, he was given nothing. "That's all the information I
got," he says. It turns out that building a wind tunnel wasn't
even the SURF project he had signe |
7.584428 | 4.065222 | -1 | Heart disease - activity Getting regular exercise when you have
heart disease is important. It can help you in these ways:
Always talk with your doctor before starting an exercise program
to make sure the exercise you would like to do is safe for you.
This is especially important if: Your doctor will tell you what
exercise is best for you. Talk with your doctor before you start
a new exercise program or before you do an activity that is much
harder than what you have been doing. Aerobic activity uses your
heart and lungs for a long period of time, helps your heart use
oxygen better, and improves blood flow. You want to make your
heart work a little harder every time, but not too hard: During
hot weather, exercise in the morning or evening. Be careful not
to wear too many layers of clothes. You can also go to an indoor
shopping mall to walk or to a fitness center. When it is cold,
cover your nose and mouth when exercising outside. Go to an
indoor shopping mall or fitness center if it is too cold or
snowy to ex |
1.382372 | 3.128688 | 50 | The following is a guest post by Barbara Bavis and Robert
Brammer, both legal reference librarians in the Public Services
Division of the Law Library of Congress. The 2012 Presidential
election is projected to be close, and attention has turned to
whether the Electoral College may diverge from the popular vote
in shaping the outcome of an election. Should this come to pass,
we will once again have a national debate as to whether the
Electoral College should be maintained, scrapped, or amended.
But what exactly is the Electoral College system and who
established it? The concept of the “Electoral College”—although
not specifically mentioned by name—appears in Article II,
Section 1 of the U.S. Constitution, representing the Founding
Fathers’ effort to create a mechanism by which the states select
the President and Vice President of the United States. Section 1
creates a select group of representatives known as “electors,”
determined by state. The number of electoral votes awarded to
each state is dependent upon |
6.744169 | 2.460451 | -1 | Economic growth in India has no automatic connection to reducing
undernutrition in Indian children and so further reductions in
the prevalence of childhood undernutrition are likely to depend
on direct investments in health and health-related programs.
These are the conclusions of a large study by researchers at the
Schools of Public Health at University of Michigan and Harvard
University, that is published in this week's PLoS Medicine.
Malavika Subramanyam, S V Subramanian and colleagues collected
data from the National Family Health Surveys conducted in India
in 1992-93 (28,066 children), 1998-99 (26,121 children) and
2005-06 (23,139 children), which use stratified, representative
samples of the population from every state of India. They used
the measurementsóweight-for-age, height-for-age, and weight-for-
heightóin these surveys to classify individual children's
nutritional status as underweight, stunting or wasting,
respectively, as per the World Health Organization Child Growth
Standards. The study report |
7.838902 | 2.261658 | -1 | The first step to preventing heart disease? Know the risks. The
second step? Avoid or reduce those risks. A heart-healthy diet
and plenty of exercise is your first line of defense. And when
it comes to nutrition in particular, you can do more than avoid
foods high in saturated fats, trans fats, and cholesterol—you
can eat foods that help lower blood pressure, reduce artery-
damaging inflammation, and keep your cholesterol in the heart-
healthy range. Here are seven tasty foods. Here are seven tasty
foods you'll want to incorporate into your diet: Sweet potatoes
contain fiber. Fiber, especially the soluble type, binds total
cholesterol in the intestinal tract and promotes cholesterol
excretion. Other high-in-soluble-fiber foods such as oats,
flaxseed and beans can also help lower cholesterol. Another
heart-healthy bonus from sweet potatoes: They are also high in
potassium and magnesium. Research shows that if Americans
boosted their potassium intake, adult cases of high blood
pressure could fall by more than 10 |
9.720711 | 4.057642 | 46 | "We know that there is considerable person-to-person variation
in the sensitivity of normal tissues, and tumour tissues, to
radiotherapy and that this sensitivity may have a genetic
basis", explained Dr. Hlscher. "It is evident also that surgery,
chemotherapy drugs and some rare genetic syndromes can influence
side effects of radiation, as may other factors such as age,
hypertension, other medication and other diseases. Prediction of
individual patient's sensitivity to radiotherapy would allow
treatment to be tailored to minimise side effects for those most
sensitive, whilst allowing more intense, and potentially more
effective, treatment for those predicted to have better
tolerance". The GENEPI (GENEtic pathways for the Prediction of
the effects of Irradiation) project aims to provide a
scientifically rigorous method of predicting both radiotherapy
efficacy and side effects based on a wide range of genetic,
physical and other patient-related factors. It will lead to the
establishment of the only pan-European |
4.162462 | 3.024108 | -1 | A printer that uses heat to transfer an impression onto paper.
There are two kinds of thermal printers: - thermal wax transfer:
a printer that adheres a wax-based ink onto paper. A thermal
printhead melts wax-based ink from the transfer ribbon onto the
paper. When cool, the wax is permanent. This type of thermal
printer uses an equivalent panel of ink for each page to be
printed, no matter if a full page or only one line of print is
transferred. Monochrome printers have a black page for each page
to be printed, while color printers have either three (CMY) or
four (CMYK) colored panels for each page. Unlike thermal dye
transfer printers , also called dye sublimation printers, these
printers print images as dots, which means that images must be
dithered first. As a result, images are not quite photo-
realistic, although they are very good. The big advantages of
these printers over thermal dye transfer printers are that they
don't require special paper and they are faster. - direct
thermal: a printer that prints |
1.955171 | 1.800387 | -1 | Largest City Abidjan,Lagunes Land Area 124,504 mi2 * Statistics
by Wolfram|Alpha. "Christianity" is used in the statistical
sense and includes Catholics, Protestants, and true Christians.
Listing in Cote D Ivoire The Republic of Cote d'Ivoire, commonly
known in English as Ivory Coast, is a country in West Africa. It
has an area of 124,504 square miles, and borders the countries
of Liberia, Guinea, Mali, Burkina Faso and Ghana; its southern
boundary is along the Gulf of Guinea. The country's population
20,600,000. Prior to its colonization by Europeans, Cote
d'Ivoire was home to several states, including Gyaaman, the Kong
Empire, and Baoule. There were two Anyi kingdoms, Indenie and
Sanwi, which attempted to retain their separate identity through
the French colonial period and after Cote d'Ivoire's
independence. An 1843-1844 treaty made Cote d'Ivoire a
"protectorate" of France and in 1893, it became a French colony
as part of the European scramble for Africa. Cote d'Ivoire
became independent on 7 August 1960. |
7.299352 | -0.893565 | -1 | Cats have ABS Brakes Cats have a sixth “finger” (called a carpal
pad) on the inside of the wrists of the front paws. It’s also
found on the paws of big cats. It is not believed to have a
function in normal walking, but is thought to be an anti-
skidding device used while jumping (or perhaps during a raucous
game of Thundering Herd of Elephants). Exactly how many lives do
they have? Not all countries believe that cats have nine lives.
In some Spanish-speaking regions, cats are believed to have
seven lives. The number drops to six in Turkey and Arabia. No
hot flashes Cats are descended from desert cats and as a result
can tolerate high temperatures well. Despite their furry coats
they show no discomfort until their skin temp rises above about
126 °F. (Humans start to feel uncomfortable when their skins
temp exceeds 112 °F — except for menopausal women, who sweat
anytime the ambient temperature rises above 24 °F.) I kidney you
not Cats’ kidneys are so efficient that cats can survive on a
diet consisting only of m |
9.043219 | 0.757207 | 129 | Are Fleas a Health Hazard? [LiveScience 2007-12-17] [Photo]
Xenopsylla cheopis (oriental rat flea), is the primary vector of
plague in most large plague epidemics in Asia, Africa, and South
America. Both male and female fleas can transmit the infection.
Shown here is a male that is engorged with blood. Credit: CDC.
Most fleas are no more than a nuisance to humans. "They
generally cause a lot of itching and scratching," says Marcia
Larkins of the Food and Drug Administration's Center for
Veterinary Medicine. "They may also cause some discomfort due to
possible allergic flea bite dermatitis." One type, the oriental
rat flea, transmits plague to humans in Asia, Africa, and South
America. Both male and female fleas can transmit the infection.
Some pets are extremely allergic to flea bites. In these pets,
fleas may cause a rash, inflammation, and hair loss. In
response, cats may compulsively overgroom, according to the FDA.
Fleas are hard to spot--look for their black, poppyseed-like
excrement. A recent study foun |
1.970816 | 6.629041 | -1 | Group students in pairs. Each student is going to draw a tree
diagram for the same event, but they are not going to build
their diagrams in the same Show the sample space for tossing one
penny and rolling one die. (H = heads, T = tails) Students
should quickly see (and remember) that the order will not change
the number of outcomes in a tree diagram. |
10.295487 | 1.529097 | -1 | NIAID established the Microbicide Trials Network (MTN) in 2006
to develop and evaluate products that women can use daily or
prior to sexual intercourse to prevent infection with HIV and
other sexually transmitted agents. Read how MTN conducts its
multi-center studies at sites around the world. View Larger Map
South Africa, located on the southern tip of the mainland,
borders both the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. Its climate varies
from arid in the northwest to tropical in the east along its
border with Mozambique. Despite being one of the most
economically advanced African nations, South Africa faces many
major health challenges. For example, the World Health
Organization (WHO) estimates that the country has the worst
prevalence of tuberculosis (TB) in the world. In addition,
UNAIDS estimates that approximately 5.4 million South Africans
are HIV-positive, and recent reports have suggested that the
prevalence is climbing. Drug-resistant malaria is also a growing
health concern in the country, while schistosomia |
7.525659 | 0.706013 | -1 | When using herbs and plant materials medicinally, there are a
host of ways in which they can be used. For example, a leaf may
be rubbed on a tender spot of skin to help cure a rash. Another
herb may be ingested after it has been turned into a tea. In
this regard, we have put together a list of methods and
applications for each of the specific uses mentioned on each
herb’s page. These descriptions are used only to serve as
general knowledge as to what the method entails. More specific
instructions are given in the “Applications” section of each
plant. Infusion: Infusion is the most common way to prepare an
herb. Quantities vary depending upon the application, but a
teaspoon of leaves, blossoms, or flowers is recognized as a
standard measurement. This dosage is mixed with boiling water
(usually 1 cup). The water is poured over the herb and steeped
for 3 to 5 minutes. Straining is recommended before drinking.
Honey is often used to improve the taste. Decoction: Some herbs
are hard and course (ie: stems, roots, b |
-2.133463 | 3.248333 | -1 | ARMENIA and IRAN i. Armina, Achaemenid Province Armina is named
as a province (satrapy) of the Achaemenid empire; the
inhabitants are called Arminiya- “Armenian.” As a by-form of the
country’s name, the form Arminiya-, is attested six times in DB
2.33-63, but only in the locative form Arminiyaiy (on this word
see R. Schmitt, Acta Antiqua 25, 1977, p. 96 n. 16). Armina is
the source of Greek Arménioi “Armenians,” Armeníē, Armeníā
[scil. Khṓrā] “Armenia;” it is rendered phonetically in Elamite
as Har-mi-nu-ya (-ip), etc. The inscriptions’ Babylonian
versions, however, use KURú-ra-áš-ṭu “Urartu” and LUú-ra-áš-ṭa-
a-a “Urartean,” i.e., the name of the kingdom (and its
inhabitants), mighty in former times in nearly the same region;
the old name was preserved by the indigenous pre-Achaemenid
cuneiform tradition. The Armenians’ name for themselves,
attested from the 5th century A.D., is Hay, plural Haykʿ, with
Hayastan “Armenia” and other derivatives. The references to
Armina in the Bīsotūn inscription (DB) from abou |
3.105181 | 6.814786 | -1 | Short for web log, a blog is a web page that serves as a
publicly accessible personal journal. New content is published
by the blog’s author on a regular basis, often daily. Most blogs
are a mixture of what is happening in a person’s life and what
is happening on the Web, but there are as many unique types of
blogs as there are people. In recent years, blogs have played an
important role in the delivery of real time commentary on
important events, such as the presidential elections. Blogs
differ from traditional sites in that rather than being composed
of individual web pages connected by hyperlinks, they consist of
a template into which content is fed from a database. Each new
item submitted to the blog is known as a post, and may include
hyperlinks to other sites on the Web. A key feature of a blog is
that visitors to the blog can submit comments on any of the
posts using a simple form. Each post on a blog will also have a
link at the bottom that will allow the person visiting the blog
to view any comments |
5.224692 | 0.412242 | -1 | Local farming communities throughout the world face binding
productivity constraints, diverse nutritional needs,
environmental concerns, and significant economic and financial
pressures. Developing countries address these challenges in
different ways, including public and private sector investments
in plant breeding and other modern tools for genetic crop
improvement. In order to measure the impact of any technology
and prioritize investments, we must assess the relevant
resources, human capacity, clusters, networks and linkages, as
well as the institutions performing technological research and
development, and the rate of farmer adoption. However, such
measures have not been recently assessed, in part due to the
lack of complete standardized information on public plant
breeding and biotechnology research in developing countries. To
tackle this void, the Food and Agricultural Organization of the
United Nations (FAO), in consultation with the International
Food Policy Institute (IFPRI) and other organizations, |
2.796531 | 7.966219 | -1 | Geometric Primitive Design This article describes K-3D's
geometric primitive data structures, which support rendering
more than one million polygons with usable interactivity while
providing unprecedented flexibility, including the ability to
introduce new geometric primitive types at runtime. Many of
K-3D's features - including the Visualization Pipeline, Mesh
Painters, and pluggable render engines - make it a natural
choice for working with new geometric primitive types, and the
new data structures make this easy. Geometric data in the K-3D
pipeline is stored using the k3d::mesh class. Each instance of
k3d::mesh is a container for a collection of geometric points,
and a collection of k3d::mesh::primitive objects. The points in
k3d::mesh are globally-accessible to every primitive within the
mesh, so primitives can "share" control-points, "stitching" them
together. Every instance of k3d::mesh::primitive stores a
specific type of geometric primitive, such as a polyhedron,
collection of curves, collection of NU |
5.629081 | 5.330336 | -1 | Their mission? To give the committee an idea of how New Yorkers,
and Americans in general, have been psychologically affected by
the World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks and what kind of
mental health resources Americans need as a result. The
psychiatrists’ major message was that the psychological impact
of the World Trade Center and Pentagon tragedies has been
enormous and will remain so for some time to come. As North
explained it: "When disasters occur, subsequent psychiatric
disorders tend to cluster most densely at the disaster epicenter
and diminish as one moves outward, generating ever smaller waves
as ripple effects reach the periphery. Those injured and those
who fled for their lives from the burning World Trade Center
towers and the Pentagon already have suffered physical and
emotional distress, but also will suffer the most frequent and
severe mental health consequences. Ripple effects will extend to
people who evacuated from nearby buildings and others who
witnessed the disaster unfolding from |
3.673996 | 0.453009 | 186 | Senegal and Gender Check the most recent online additions,
updated daily. Content from selected partners can be found by
following the relevant links in the central panel below - or
check out our editor's selection of the best sector specific
information from other websites. Search BRIDGE's database of
gender-focused material - The BLDS gender collection Search for
the latest gender-related print documents on this country from
the British Library for Development Studies collection -
Evaluating Tostan’s community empowerment programme: finding out
what works to prevent gender-based violence in Senegal - Program
for Appropriate Technology in Health, 2012 - PATH is currently
conducting a four year evaluation of a community based health
and human rights awareness initiative called the Community
Empowerment Programme. PATH is examining the programme’s impact
on gender based violence,... - Common ground In Bangladesh,
Ghana, Nepal, Senegal and Trinidad and Tobago - Women’s
Environment and Development Organisation, |
6.297891 | 0.927185 | -1 | At least fourteen people have died after eating toxic sardines
in Madagascar. The deaths occurred in the town of Toliara, with
another similar situation happening 130 km (80.8 mi) away in
Sakaraha. The sardines the victims ate belong to the Clupeidae
family. As well as the dead, around 120 people have been taken
ill after eating the fish according to officials. Dr Hery
Raharisaina, Madagascar’s fishing and aquatic resources
minister, offered condolence to the families of the victims on
behalf of the government. He added in his statement that the
government would pay for the medical bills for those who are
still hospitalized from the toxic fish and would also supply 100
mattresses to the city of Toliara, as the region’s hospital is
overcrowded. Samples of the sardines have been sent to health
officials at the Institut Pasteur de Madagascar in the capital
city of Antananarivo. Incidents like this have happened before
in which researchers have tracked the cause down to the fish
eating poisonous seaweed. Madagasc |
3.130238 | 4.360887 | -1 | Pride Survey Results The Walker County Safe and Drug Free
Schools and Community Program Under the No Child Left Behind
legislation, school are required to establish a Uniform
Management and Information Reporting System.The collected data,
from anonymous student surveys, shall include: "the incidence
and prevalence, age of onset, perception of social disapproval
of drug use and violence by youth in schools and communities".
The graphs and tables in this summary are compiled from data
collected in the Walker County Schools using the Pride Surveys
Questionnaire for grades 6 - 12. The total number of students
surveyed in 6 - 12 grades was 3,240. This is the sampling of the
total number of students in 6 - 12 grades in the Walker County
School System. Pride Survey 2007 |
3.778412 | 8.139552 | -1 | - Get Started Years ago, Microsoft defined RSS (Receive-Side
Scaling) with the goal of improving packet processing by
enabling multiple cores to process packets concurrently. Today
RSS is implemented in modern 1-10 Gbit network adapters as a way
to distribute packets across RX queues. When incoming packets
are received, network adapters (in hardware) decode the packet
and hash the main packet header fields (e.g. IP address and
port). The hash result is used to identify into which ingress RX
queue the packet will be queued. In order to balance the traffic
evenly on the RX queues, RSS implements asymmetric hash. This
means that packets belonging to a TCP connection between host A
and B, will go to two different queues: A-to-B will go to queue
X, and B-to-A will go to queue Y, where X is different than Y.
This mechanism guarantees that the traffic is distributed as
much as possible on all available queues, but it has some
drawbacks as applications that need to analyze bi-directional
traffic (e.g. network monitor |
5.701509 | 1.88945 | -1 | Fire safety officials offer the following tips for cooking on
Thanksgiving • Always stay in the kitchen while frying, grilling
or broiling food. If you have to leave the kitchen for even a
short period of time, turn off the stove. • Set a timer when
cooking so you don’t forget to turn off the burners or oven. •
If a pan catches fire, cover it with a lid immediately and turn
off the burner. Don’t attempt to fight a grease fire with water.
For an oven fire, turn off the heat and keep the door closed. •
Stay alert. If you are sleepy or have consumed alcohol, don’t
use the stove or oven. • Keep anything that can catch fire such
as oven mitts, wooden utensils, food packaging, towels or
curtains away from the stove. • Wear tight-fitting sleeves when
cooking. Loose clothing can contact a burner and ignite.
ANDERSON — Fire safety officials are urging people who use
turkey fryers to be extra careful when cooking on Thanksgiving.
Turkeys that are wet or improperly thawed can cause a fire when
placed in boiling cooking |
3.133219 | 0.50608 | 114 | This is odd. Take a look at this map of America at night. As
you’d expect, the cities are ablaze, the Great Lakes and the
oceans dark, but if you look at the center, where the eastern
lights give way to the empty western plains, there’s a
mysterious clump of light there that makes me wonder. It’s a
little to the left, high up near the Canadian border. Just run
your eye up that line of lights at the center of the country,
look over to the upper left — there’s a patch that looks like a
big city —but there is no big city in that part of North Dakota.
There’s mostly grass. So what are those lights doing there? What
is that? If you need help, here’s the same map again, this time
the patch is marked with a circle. It turns out, yes, that’s not
a city. And those lights weren’t there six years ago. What we
have here is an immense and startlingly new oil and gas field —
nighttime evidence of an oil boom created by a technology called
fracking. Those lights are rigs, hundreds of them, lit at night,
or fiery flares of n |
3.990507 | -2.344488 | -1 | A. Stranded or not stranded? 1 . Generally, a stranded animal is
any live marine animal that is out of its element, or outside of
its survival envelope (Geraci and Lounsbury, 1993). Examples of
stranded animals include a dolphin lying on the beach, a seal
that is out of its range, or an icebound whale. 2. Healthy
seals, sea lions, walruses, and otters naturally haul out onto
land at times to rest, mate, pup, or molt (Geraci and Lounsbury,
1993). This behavior is not considered stranding. A healthy pup,
which may appear stranded because it is thin, feeble, and crying
plaintively, may have a mother nearby (Geraci and Lounsbury,
1993). A stranded animal is a live marine animal that is out of
its element due to an illness, injury, or other condition
threatening its survival. B. Masking symptoms A wild animal with
an illness or injury generally will try to mask its symptoms for
as long as possible to avoid predators. C. When animals strand
In general, a marine animal may strand if it has a severe,
debilitating ill |
10.058376 | 4.103076 | 77 | Most Active Stories Shots - Health Blog Wed December 7, 2011 Why
Observing Prostate Cancers Is Gaining Ground On Surgery
Originally published on Wed December 7, 2011 2:26 pm A federally
convened panel of experts says most men with newly diagnosed
prostate cancer should be offered the chance to put off
treatment in favor of medical monitoring of their condition. In
fact, the panel went so far as to say doctors should stop
calling most of these low-risk tumors cancer at all. "Strong
consideration should be given to removing the anxiety-provoking
term 'cancer' for this condition," the 13-member panel says in
its draft recommendations, which were produced after two days of
presentation and debate. Some think these tumors should be
rebranded as something else, such as idle tumors, to reflect the
fact that they're not all that threatening and don't necessarily
need to be treated. The analogy, though imperfect, is that some
early skin cancers are called "actinic keratoses" and early
cervical cancers are termed "dysp |
8.888128 | 5.646717 | 103 | (ACE), America’s leading authority on fitness and the world’s
largest nonprofit fitness certification, education and training
organization, today announced the results of an independently
conducted, academic study on Vibram FiveFingers, a sock-style
shoe designed to simulate the effect of running barefoot while
still protecting the foot. The study found that while the shoes
may be beneficial for those who suffer from chronic running
injuries, using Vibrams and barefoot-style shoes for running can
pose additional risks if runners do not adopt the correct foot-
to-ground strike style. ACE commissioned the study to determine
what happens when runners switch from their traditional running
shoes to wearing minimalist running shoes like Vibram
FiveFingers. Advocates of barefoot running suggest that
traditional running shoes may increase a runner’s risk of
injury, as the shoes encourage the foot to use a heel-strike
pattern, which causes more pounding and stress. Conversely,
barefoot runners tend to run more lightly, |
5.204136 | -1.746363 | 121 | Two jaguar cubs are providing more than just cooing fans for
Milwaukee's zoo. The spotted brothers are introducing new genes
to the endangered species' captive population because unlike
most zoo babies, their father was born in the wild. The blue-
eyed cubs, born Nov. 13, don't officially have names just yet,
but keepers at the Milwaukee County Zoo are calling them "Gaps"
and "Dots," due to the markings on their heads. Stacey Johnson,
coordinator of the jaguar species survival plan for the American
Zoo and Aquarium Association, said it is rare for zoos'
reproductive programs to have access to animals born in the
wild. "They are bringing in a new inflow of genes that will help
sustain the population over next 100 years," Johnson said. He
also noted that the cubs — the first born at the zoo since 1975
— are also beneficial because female jaguars currently outnumber
males in zoos in North America. The cubs, currently about the
size of house cats, are still too small to navigate their multi-
level exhibit, so they |
9.001176 | -0.116311 | -1 | What caused several bats to die suddenly, and whose job is it to
dispose of something like that? Two bats were discovered on the
Milford High School track last week by a Patch reader, who asked
whether it was the police or the animal control officer who
should be contacted. One bat was dead, the other one dying. Who
to call? It depends. If wildlife is on someone's private
property, the homeowner needs to handle it, including by calling
a nuisance wildlife company. Milford Animal Control can
intervene on a private property if an animal is rabid, and
people have been affected, but with dead wildlife in the
outdoors, the best solution is to leave it alone, said Rochelle
Thomson, the animal control officer. With the high school track
incident, Thomson responded to the call once she was on duty,
but by that time, the bats were gone, she said. No one is sure
what happened to them. But with bats, people need to take care.
Massachusetts has two species of bats, the little brown bat and
the big brown bat. They are sim |
6.053134 | 3.394986 | -1 | Scientists have shown that they can use nano-particles and radio
waves to turn genes on and off. Nano-particles of metals, like
aluminum, are being breathed in by everyone under the artificial
clouds known as 'chem-trails'. So the hard part has been solved-
how to get people to ingest nano-particles. Now with radio
waves, specific genes can be activated or deactivated remotely.
Reported publicly so far in mice, there is no doubt a vastly
more important potential in the control of human genes using the
frequencies that just happen to be the ones utilized in cell
phones... Makes you wonder if all this is a plan by somebody to
control the world and everybody in it. But we all know by now
that the wicked people who control this world would only use
such power for good... Scientists remotely activate and
deactivate genes with radio waves Geneticists at Rockefeller
University in New York have demonstrated the ability to remotely
activate and deactivate specially engineered insulin production
genes in mice through t |
1.847464 | 6.999301 | -1 | Actual Existence of All That Is, and a Primer on its
Manipulation Further Manipulation of Strings through Absolute
Time If it is possible to exert energy enough to bend these
strings, then it is reasonable to bend a string back on itself.
If this is so, then two things can happen in the event of
knotting the strings. Event 1 is where the string is bent so
that 2 different times on one string contact and diverge back
into the strings natural path. Fig 16. A variation of this can
also be when one string continuously goes back on itself (fig
17) due to a greater number of acting forces. During the points
where a string comes in contact with itself they act like
highway ramps. This allows for the transfer of existence from
one point in time on the string to The bends in the string do
not reverse the time; they only take a different path in time.
This is what allows for the exchange of existence between
points. It’s like driving all the way around the traffic circle
then continuing on your original path. The other |
2.478074 | 3.158697 | 56 | When Are We in a Recession? A recession is complicated to
define, but there are many indicators to examine. CREDIT: Wallet
image via Shutterstock To the average American, it might seem
ludicrous to suggest that the United States is not in a
recession right now. But economists' fuzzy definition of the
term makes it hard to say when a recession actually starts until
we're well into one. Last week, the International Monetary Fund
said the United States likely will slide into recession. And one
thing's for sure: When we get there, the economy will be in the
toilet. There are, of course, more technical definitions. You
might hear, for example, that recession occurs when gross
domestic product (GDP) growth is negative for two or more
consecutive quarters. But that's not an adequate measure, most
economists agree. The National Bureau of Economic Research
(NBER), a non-profit group that includes economics researchers
and professors from all over the country, has a somewhat formal
definition that is often cited, said |
-0.699882 | 3.618792 | -1 | 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica/Stoss, Veit |←Story, William
Wetmore||1911 Encyclopædia Britannica, Volume 25 |Stothard,
Charles Alfred→| |See also Veit Stoss on Wikipedia, and our 1911
Encyclopædia Britannica disclaimer.| STOSS, VEIT (1438 or
1440-1533), German sculptor and wood carver, was born in
Nuremberg. In 1477 he went to Cracow, where he was actively
engaged until 1499. It was here that he carved the high altar
for the Marienkirche, between 1477 and 1484. On the death of
King Kasimir IV. in 1492 Stoss carved his tomb in red marble for
the cathedral in Cracow. To the same date is ascribed the marble
tombstone of the archbishop Zbigniew Ollsnicki in the cathedral
at Gnesen; and soon after this he executed the Stanislaus altar
for the Marienkirche at Cracow. In 1496 he returned to
Nuremberg, where he did a great deal of work in completing
altars. His main works are: a relief with the Coronation of the
Blessed Virgin in the Germanic museum at Nuremberg, a statue of
the Blessed Virgin in the Frauenkirche, the |
9.09596 | 4.918172 | -1 | Peripheral artery disease (PAD) is a slow and progressive
circulation disorder. It may involve disease in any of the blood
vessels outside of the heart and diseases of the lymph vessels –
the arteries, veins or lymphatic vessels. Organs supplied by
these vessels – such as the brain, heart, and legs – may not
receive adequate blood flow for ordinary function. However, the
legs and feet are most commonly affected, thus the name
peripheral artery disease. The terms “peripheral artery
disease,” “peripheral vascular disease” and “peripheral arterial
disease” are often used interchangeably. In the United States,
about 10 million people have peripheral artery disease. It is
frequently found in people with coronary artery disease, because
atherosclerosis, which causes coronary artery disease, is a
widespread disease of the arteries. There are two main goals for
treatment of PAD: control the symptoms and halt the progression
of the disease to lower the risk of heart attack, stroke, and
other complications. A common tr |
2.98657 | 8.597542 | 17 | SEAM (Simple Extensible Abstract Machine) is a virtual machine
architecture and library. SEAM is designed to be language- and
platform-independent, to be simple and based on few principled
services. - Uniform data representation and memory management.
All datastructures used to represent computations, including
code and threads, reside in an abstract store, which represents
an abstract graph of data nodes. Language specific
datastructures are modelled on top of the language-independent
store structures. The store manages the allocation of nodes and
their efficient layout in memory. - Platform-independent
external representation. Store values are converted to a
portable representation during export (pickling), and converted
back during import (unpickling). A language-independent transfer
language is defined to describe values independent from
platform. Unpickling operates with respect to runtime-pluggable
language-dependent transformation. For example, language
specific code can be instantiated either to byte |
-0.444994 | -2.265374 | -1 | The Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) spacecraft is
expected to discover its 1,000TH comet this summer. The SOHO
spacecraft is a joint effort between NASA and the European Space
Agency. It has accounted for approximately one-half of all comet
discoveries with computed orbits in the history of astronomy.
"Before SOHO was launched, only 16 sun grazing comets had been
discovered by space observatories. Based on that experience, who
could have predicted SOHO would discover more than 60 times that
number, and in only nine years," said Dr. Chris St. Cyr. He is
senior project scientist for NASA's Living With a Star program
at the agency's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
"This is truly a remarkable achievement!" About 85 percent of
the comets SOHO discovered belongs to the Kreutz group of sun
grazing comets, so named because their orbits take them very
close to Earth's star. The Kreutz sun grazers pass within
500,000 miles of the star's visible surface. Mercury, the planet
closest to the sun, is a |
6.398418 | 0.102692 | -1 | WVU Extension Service Veterinary Sciences Specialist Designing a
herd health program for the cow-calf ranch requires setting
comprehensive goals. Designing a program that prevents only
death and sickness is shortsighted and will not maximize herd
profitability. This report will provide goals and strategies for
a comprehensive herd health program. Four main goals of the herd
health program are common to all ranches. A list of strategies
for reaching these goals is presented. It is up to the rancher
and his veterinarian to pick and choose which strategies to use
and to assign a herd calendar to implement those strategies. 1.
The first goal is to have optimum reproductive performance. A
realistic goal is to have 90 percent or greater of all cows give
birth to a live calf. What strategies can be utilized to reach
this goal? To achieve maximum live births, maximize the number
of cows and heifers that get pregnant within the defined
breeding period. The most important management tool to optimize
pregnancy is proper |
0.960884 | 5.353129 | -1 | Language(s): Gaelic, Subtitles: Eng Between 2004 and 2005
Discovery Channel aired a series of short video clips, co-
produced with the UN, which focus on endangered communities
living in different regions of the world. The languages of these
communities face extinction simply because their numbers are
very low and constantly on the decline. The highest population
count a community featured on this series had was 5,000, the
lowest, 300. RESTRICTED. For inquiries about how to get
authorization to reuse this material or to obtain a disk copy of
it, please contact the publisher or the author directly. For
further information refer to our FAQs 6 to 9 |
8.965977 | 3.142609 | -1 | Sickle cell disease is an inherited blood disorder. Normally,
red blood cells are disc-shaped and flexible. In sickle cell
disease, however, hemoglobin (the chemical within red blood
cells that carries oxygen around the body) is abnormal. This
causes red blood cells to collapse into a crescent or sickle
shape. It also causes the red blood cells to be abnormally stiff
and fragile. These elongated, stiff red blood cells have a
tendency to clump together and clog up small blood vessels
throughout the body. When blood vessels are blocked by sickle-
shaped red blood cells, parts of the body are deprived of
oxygen. This can cause severe pain and damage to the organs and
tissues that are deprived of oxygen. Furthermore, abnormal red
blood cells are destroyed at an unusually high rate, causing a
shortage of red blood cells (called anemia). Sickle cell disease
is a genetic disorder. If you receive two defective genes (one
from each of your parents), you will have sickle cell disease.
If you only have one defective gene |
3.826892 | 3.83719 | -1 | New science shows an evolutionary reason for our love of Mozart
and Carly Rae Jepsen: It binds us together Poor Alfred Russel
Wallace! Virtually unknown these days compared to Darwin,
Wallace was one of the 19th century’s greatest biologists and
perhaps the preeminent field naturalist of all time. Those who
have heard of Wallace know him primarily as the codiscoverer,
with Darwin, of natural selection. But whereas Darwin had
laboriously worked out the details, with copious examples from
the living world, over a period of decades, Wallace literally
came upon the principle of natural selection in a kind of
brainstorm, a moment of epiphany while he lay in a malarial
fever at a remote island campsite in what is today Indonesia.
The story has oft been told: Barely recovered from his illness,
Wallace sent Darwin a brief manuscript setting out “his” theory,
which in turn nudged Darwin to speed up publication of the much
lengthier book — “On the Origin of Species” — that Darwin had
been perfecting, more or less in pr |
3.168762 | 0.617035 | -1 | AUDIE CORNISH, HOST: From NPR News, this is ALL THINGS
CONSIDERED. I'm Audie Cornish. It looks as though the natural
gas boom is here to stay. A new study of the Barnett Shale in
Texas, one of the country's largest natural gas fields, predicts
there is enough gas there to last three decades. And the finding
show how fracking technology has fundamentally changed the
energy picture. Here's NPR's Wade Goodwyn. WADE GOODWYN, BYLINE:
There are few things in life more joyful than discovering a
giant oil or natural gas field in Texas. You're rich beyond your
wildest dreams. When the scope and size of the natural gas
reservoir in the Barnett Shale in North Texas first became
apparent, there were predictions that the find would last 100
years. No, that was over the top. But University of Texas
geology professor Scott Tinker, who designed and authored the
Barnett Shale study, says there's still a lot of gas down there
even after a decade of drilling. SCOTT TINKER: It turns out what
we learned is that there's a lot of g |
9.072394 | 0.051442 | -1 | What are dog rabies? Rabies is transmitted by a virus and is one
of the most devastating diseases affecting mammals, including
dogs and humans. How is dog rabies transmitted? The disease is
usually transmitted by the bite of an infected animal. It is a
disease of antiquity; the danger from the bite of a mad dog was
known as long ago as the 23rd century BC. How widespread is
Rabies in dogs? Canine Rabies occurs in every continent except
Australia and Antarctica. Most countries are affected with the
exception of Great Britain, Ireland, Japan, Norway, Sweden and
the Iberian Peninsula. How is the virus transmitted? Rabies
virus does not survive long outside the body. The infection is
transmitted when one infected animal bites another. In Europe,
foxes are the main reservoir while in North America the skunk,
raccoon and bat are important transmission routes. In Asia,
Africa and Latin America the main reservoir is not wildlife but
stray dogs. In these areas, human infection and fatalities are
more common. How long |
3.879515 | 6.617358 | 125 | Around 1964, Gene Roddenberry came up with the now legendary
“transporter” effect for Star Trek, mostly out of necessity. I
don’t think he believed that teleportation technology would
actually exist within 300 years or so, but as a writer’s device,
the transporter solved a myriad of production problems for
Roddenberry’s planned TV series. Compared with having to build
complex miniatures to show the USS Enterprise landing on a new
planet each week, “beaming” actors off the set was a much
simpler effect to insert each week. “Land a ship fourteen
stories tall on a planet surface every week?” Roddenberry
exclaimed to writer Stephen E. Whitfield in his classic 1968
book, The Making of Star Trek. “Not only would it have blown our
entire weekly budget, but just suggesting it would have probably
ruined my reputation in the industry forever.” Or as Mark Steyn
summed things up nearly 40 years later in his 2005 obituary for
James Doohan, the transporter’s most famous operator, “‘Beaming’
was the special effect – the one |
0.209311 | 5.760226 | 40 | Wa alaikum assalaam wa rahmatullahi wa barakatuh, 1. When the
last letter of a word has a shaddah on it, and we are stopping
on the word, the only way to form the letter is with collision
of the two participating parts of articulation. It is impossible
to have collision of the first part of the shaddah, and separate
before colliding again for the second part of the shaddah, for
if we do this, we will be putting a vowel on the first part of
the shaddah, which as we know is saakin. Physically we cannot
just by normal letter formation make clear that there are two
letters on shaddah when stopping on it (outside of the
exceptions we have stating in the lesson on the . The only way
to make clear that there are two letters (the two parts of the
shaddah) is by making a , or accent. This makes clear there are
two letters. There is no other way to do it without adding a
vowel or qalqalah to the first letter of the shaddah. We stated
in the lesson you are referring to: When stopping on a word like
this, we stop with on |
0.722876 | 3.62774 | 20 | Lucy E. Parsons (1853 – 7 March 1942) was a radical American
labor organizer, anarchist, and orator. She was born in Texas,
likely as a slave, to parents of Native American, Black American
and Mexican ancestry. She often went by the name of Lucy
Gonzaleses. - Let every dirty, lousy tramp arm himself with a
revolver or a knife, and lay in wait on the steps of the palaces
of the rich and stab or shoot the owners as they come out. Let
us kill them without mercy, and let it be a war of
extermination. - Statement appearing in the Chicago Tribune in
1885, as quoted in "What’s Missing From Black History Month" by
Jon Hochshartner in The Red Pheonix (10 February 2012) The
Principles of Anarchism - Governments never lead; they follow
progress. When the prison, stake or scaffold can no longer
silence the voice of the protesting minority, progress moves on
a step, but not until then. - My mind is appalled at the thought
of a political party having control of all the details that go
to make up the sum total of our lives. |
-0.537301 | 0.72941 | -1 | Nuke Test Makes Nuclear Abolition More Important Than Ever North
Korea’s test-firing of a short-range missile heightens and
underlines the dangers of a world in which nuclear arms are
spreading. The news media treats the North Korea’s nuclear
weapons program as a story of a bad actor threatening
international security, giving it the sort of attention rarely
given to calls for constructive action to eliminate the danger
of nuclear weapons. In particular, the frayed Nuclear
Nonproliferation Treaty is seldom mentioned, nor the obligation
contained in the treaty for the nuclear powers, including the
United States, to eliminate nuclear stockpiles. The contrast
hits home in Hiroshima, Japan, the first city attacked with an
atomic bomb. Just eight days before the North Korean test, the
city’s daily newspaper, the Chugoku Shimbun, released an appeal
from 17 Nobel Peace Prize laureates for citizens and governments
to act for the elimination of nuclear weapons. Outside of Japan,
the laureates’ Hiroshima-Nagasaki Declar |
4.755959 | -0.834915 | -1 | Our Belovezhskaya Pushcha, the National park, Biosphere Reserve,
and National World Heritage Site, is in danger! In ancient
times, most of Europe was covered by dense, impassable forests,
but now only disconnected islands remain of those primeval
areas. Located on the border between Poland and Belarus,
Belovezhskaya Pushcha is the largest of these surviving
woodlands. In recognition of its unique status as the last
remaining primary deciduous and mixed forest in the European
lowland, Belovezhskaya Pushcha has been named to the World
Natural Heritage List, declared a Biosphere Reserve, and awarded
the European Diploma for Protected Areas. The current situation
in the Belovezhskaya Pushcha Despite its protected status, the
Belovezhskaya Pushcha finds itself in great danger. Management
methods now being applied in the park are threatening to destroy
this unique treasure of the past. Powerful financial managers
appointed as directors of the National Park are cutting down
healthy trees. Intensive economic activity |
5.951926 | 6.248499 | -1 | |SPD and Other Disorders| When two disorders co-exist in one
person, the phenomenon is known as "comorbidity." The SPD
Foundation has sponsored and conducted a number of studies into
the comorbidity of SPD with other common childhood disorders
such as ADHD, autistic spectrum disorders including Asperger's,
Fragile X Syndrome, Prader-Willi Syndrome, and other diagnoses.
SPD and ADHD Scientists and parents alike are keenly interested
in understanding the relationship between SPD and Attention
Deficit Disorder (ADHD), a better-known condition that is
frequently treated with medication. Although the neurological
basis of the two disorders is different, children with the
sensory-seeking subtype of SPD are especially likely to be
diagnosed and treated for ADHD because their behaviors are
similar to behaviors in children with Attention Deficit
Disorder. Studies by SPD Foundation suggest that SPD and ADHD
are unique disorders, each with its own distinct symptoms. This
means that SPD is not simply a type of ADHD, and |
3.425964 | -0.316879 | -1 | | Dry river bed. Image credit: iStock photo / © Jyeshern Cheng A
recent report from the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) states that “warming of the climate system
is unequivocal.” According to the IPCC, average global
temperatures are increasing at an alarming rate. In just the
past 50 years, northern hemisphere temperatures were higher than
during any other 50-year period in the last 500 years, perhaps
even the past 1,300 years. The IPCC projects that the Earth’s
surface temperature could rise by as much as 4°C within the next
century. The primary cause of climate change is increasing
concentration of greenhouse gases (GHGs), especially carbon
dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere. The 2007 Assessment Report by
the IPCC indicates that GHG emissions increased by 70 percent
between 1970 and 2004. These gases are primarily emitted as a
result of human behavior, such as the burning of fossil fuels to
produce energy. Building consturction and energy use account for
more than 30 percent o |
3.51842 | 0.687991 | 9 | Imperial Oil, majority owned by ExxonMobil Corp., produces an
average of more than 140,000 b/d of bitumen from the Cold Lake
deposit via cyclic steam stimulation. ExxonMobil Upstream
Research said the steam injection technology, developed by
Imperial at Cold Lake, improves regulation and distribution of
steam in long horizontal wells, reducing the number of wells
required, lowering operating costs by cutting steam consumption,
and improving bitumen recovery. The system has two key
components. One is an externally mounted screen section that
facilitates contact between the well and reservoir. The other is
one or more small flow orifices beneath the screen section that
create the desired level of flow restriction between the inside
of the pipe and the reservoir. The technology allows control of
steam into the formation over the full length of a horizontal
well. In steam-assisted gravity drainage developments, it can be
used in injector and producer wells to manage steam
distribution. Eddie Lui, Imperial vice-pr |
-1.588427 | 4.594258 | 37 | - Prayer and Worship - Beliefs and Teachings - Issues and Action
- Catholic Giving - About USCCB The inauguration of a public
official is normally a civic function, at which representatives
of various religious traditions may be invited to offer public
prayers. St. Paul writes, "I ask that supplications, prayers,
petitions, and thanksgivings be offered for everyone, for kings
and for all in authority, that we may lead a quiet and tranquil
life in all devotion and dignity" (1 Timothy 2:1–2).It is,
therefore, appropriate to offer prayers in liturgical settings
for our civic leaders, as the prayers of the needs of the
faithful and the world are lifted up and offered to the Lord.The
inauguration of the President of the United States is a
particularly significant moment which draws the attention of all
citizens of our land.It is fitting that the prayer of the
Church, particularly gathered at the Eucharist, be attuned to
the occasion. January 20, Inauguration Day, is usually observed
as a weekday in the Second Week |
6.402757 | -2.294316 | -1 | New Guide for Common Spiders of the Chicago Region The Field
Museum's Division of Environment, Culture, and Conservation
(ECCo) has developed a Rapid Color Guide for Common Spiders of
the Chicago Region. The guide and others can be viewed and
downloaded for free from The Field Museum's website at
http://fm2.fieldmuseum.org/plantguides/guideimages.asp?ID=472
The goal of Rapid Color Guides is to provide a set of free tools
that help individuals quickly and accurately identify species in
the field. The Guides often concentrate on a limited geographic
area and may fill gaps in the published literature. If you have
other ideas for new Rapid Color Guides, please contact
email@example.com. |
6.537558 | 4.69315 | -1 | Controlled substances act The Controlled Substances Act (CSA)
was enacted into law by the Congress of the United States as
Title II of the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control
Act of 1970. The CSA is the federal U.S. drug policy under which
the manufacture, importation, possession, and distribution of
certain drugs is regulated. The Act also served as the national
implementing legislation for the Single Convention on Narcotic
Drugs. The legislation created five Schedules (classifications),
with varying qualifications for a drug to be included in each.
Two federal departments, the Department of Justice and the
Department of Health and Human Services (which includes the Food
and Drug Administration) determine which drugs are added or
removed from the various schedules, though the statute passed by
Congress created the initial listing. Classification decisions
are required to be made on the criteria of potential for abuse,
accepted medical use in the United States, and potential for
dependence. The De |
1.827914 | 0.401405 | 94 | Great Basin National Park Great Basin National Park is a United
States National Park established in 1986, located in east-
central Nevada near its border with Utah, five miles west of the
town of Baker. The park derives its name from the Great Basin,
the dry and mountainous region between the Sierra Nevada and the
Rocky Mountains. Flora and fauna There is almost an 8,000 foot
(2,400 m) difference in elevation between Wheeler Peak and the
valley floor. Weather conditions in the park vary with
elevation. In late spring and early summer, days in the valley
may be hot, yet the snowpack may not have melted at high
elevations. The Great Basin is a desert, with low relative
humidity and sharp drops in temperature at night. In the summer
fierce afternoon thunderstorms are common. Weather conditions
are highly variable. Please come prepared for all types of
weather. It can snow any time of the year at high elevations.
The nearest airport is located in Cedar City, Utah, 142 miles
away. Major airports are found in Salt L |
0.398225 | 1.815147 | -1 | By Jesse Colombo (This article was written on May 18th, 2012)
The South Sea Bubble was a speculative bubble in the early 18th
century involving the shares of the South Sea Company, a British
international trading company that was granted a monopoly in
trade with Spain’s colonies in South America and the West Indies
as part of a treaty made after the War of the Spanish
Succession. In return for these exclusive trading rights, the
company assumed England’s war debt. When investors recognized
the potential profits to be made from trade with the gold and
silver-rich South American colonies, they bid the South Sea
Company’s shares and the shares of similar trading companies to
incredible heights in a typical speculative bubble fashion. Not
long after virtually all classes of British society were
thoroughly engaged in wild stock speculation, the South Sea
Bubble popped and stock prices violently collapsed, financially
ruining their investors. Events Leading Up to the South Sea
Bubble The South Sea Company was found |
5.420125 | -2.421325 | 3 | Individual differences | Methods | Statistics | Clinical |
Educational | Industrial | Professional items | World psychology
| Duck is the common name for a number of species in the
Anatidae family of birds. The ducks are divided between several
subfamilies listed in full in the Anatidae article; they do not
represent a monophyletic group but a form taxon, being the
Anatidae not considered swans and geese. Ducks are mostly
aquatic birds, mostly smaller than the swans and geese, and may
be found in both fresh water and sea water. The word duck (from
Anglo-Saxon dūce), meaning the bird, came from the verb "to
duck" (from Anglo-Saxon supposed *dūcan) meaning "to bend down
low as if to get under something" or "to dive", because of the
way many species in the dabbling duck group feed by upending
(compare Dutch duiken, German tauchen = "to dive"). This
happened because the older Anglo-Saxon words ened (= "duck") and
ende (= "end") came to be pronounced the same: other Germanic
languages still have similar words for |
1.087812 | 6.632554 | -1 | If you’ve taught for any length of time, you’ll probably have to
confront plagiarism. Even in the age before the Internet,
students plagiarized, though it might be a little easier to do
now than it was when you were in high school. A variety of tools
can help you detect plagiarism, but what are you supposed to do
about it? First of all, consider the age of your students. I
think if you have middle schoolers, they likely don’t know or
haven’t learned how to attribute quotes. Students should be
taught how to attribute information. Model it. Teach them to use
just the part of the quote they need. I have a handout on
integrating quotes that might be helpful. Teach students what
plagiarism is and how to avoid it. Barry Gilmore’s book
Plagiarism: Why It Happens, How to Prevent It can help you.
Melissa Vosen has a great article in the July 2008 issue of
English Journal entitled “Using Bloom’s Taxonomy to Teach
Students About Plagiarism.” I’ve used it for two years (and will
use it again in January) and have found it |
2.871906 | -0.976782 | -1 | Guatemala - Average precipitation in depth Average precipitation
in depth (mm per year) The value for Average precipitation in
depth (mm per year) in Guatemala was 1,996 as of 2009. As the
graph below shows, over the past 47 years this indicator reached
a maximum value of 1,996 in 2009 and a minimum value of 1,996 in
1962. Definition: Average precipitation is the long-term average
in depth (over space and time) of annual precipitation in the
country. Precipitation is defined as any kind of water that
falls from clouds as a liquid or a solid. Source: Food and
Agriculture Organization, electronic files and web site. Topic:
Environment Indicators Sub-Topic: Land use |
10.575994 | 1.794966 | 7 | Half of Hawai'i AIDS survivors face new health problems In
addition to cognitive impairment, investigators also find higher
risks for heart, kidney diseaseUniversity of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
Posted: Nov. 30, 2011 In 2011, where medicines are available,
HIV/AIDS has become a chronic disease instead of a death
sentence. That's progress to celebrate, no question. However,
the Hawaiʻi Center for AIDS has found HIV appears to lead to
'premature aging,' which is presenting a new set of challenges.
To mark the upcoming World AIDS Day, the Hawaiʻi Center for AIDS
will host a public forum on Wednesday, November 30, 2011,
5:30-6:30 p.m. at the John A. Burns School of Medicine, 651
Ilalo Street, Medical Education Building Room 315. The most
recent research by the Hawaiʻi Center for AIDS scientists will
be discussed, including: - The Hawaiʻi Center for AIDS has
demonstrated conclusively through "fat biopsy studies" that
early-generation AIDS drugs damaged parts of fat cells, leading
to the disfiguring pooling of fat around th |
3.786957 | 0.187427 | -1 | IN THIS ISSUE Conservation Psychology: Using Psychological Tools
to Address Environmental Challenges What is conservation
psychology? According to one definition, it is the scientific
study of the reciprocal relationships between humans and the
rest of nature, with the goal of encouraging conservation of the
natural world. A more interesting question might be why is
conservation psychology. Although this may be a more
sophisticated audience that understands the need, I still get
the question, "What does psychology have to do with
environmental challenges?" A simple answer: Psychology is about
human behavior; human behavior has caused the environmental
problems we face but will also help us to cope with them.
Psychology is about human attitudes; people have strong
attitudes, both positive and negative, about the environment and
environmental organizations. Psychology is about human health,
and human health is powerfully affected by the health of the
natural environment. Environmental threats pose both direct a |
4.390244 | 2.273765 | -1 | - Highest Ratings Quality: We've got the awards to prove it! -
Fastest Shipping - No-Hassle Returns - USA Support Techs - Best
Value - Our Guarantee Chevy S10 pickup Blower Motor Resistor
What is a Blower Motor Resistor and where is it Located? The
blower motor resistor, also commonly referred to as an A/C
blower motor resistor or a heater blower motor resistor, is an
important component to your vehicle’s HVAC (heating,
ventilation, air conditioning) system. While a blower motor is
what actually forces the hot or cold air through ducting and
your car’s interior vents into the cabin, the resistor is what
regulates the speed of the blower fan by reducing voltage going
to the fan. It allows you to vary the settings of the blower
motor so that you can lessen the amount of air that comes into
the cabin, as opposed to only being able to have it blasted at
you. The blower motor resistor works between a vehicle’s heater
and A/C controls and the blower motor and is typically attached
under the dash to the heater ducti |
1.51276 | -0.322627 | -1 | Image: RYAN REID These days hardly a week goes by without
important discoveries concerning the history of life on Earth
making headlines. Indeed, just last month researchers described
a fossil that pushes the origins of key mammal features back
some 45 million years. And last week scientists announced that
new dates for an extinction event that claimed most of
Australia's large animals show that humans, not the climate,
wiped them out. Although visual inspection of the rocks, fossils
and archaeological remains used to reconstruct our planet's past
provides critical information, only by ascertaining their ages
can researchers put this data into a meaningful context. The
first step toward accurately measuring geologic time came at the
turn of the 20th century, when French physicist Henry Becquerel
discovered the natural radioactive decay of uranium. Shortly
thereafter, building on related work by Ernest Rutherford,
American chemist Bertram Borden Boltwood determined that he
could use the predictable decay of ra |
4.371231 | 1.282229 | -1 | Green Roofs Sprout Over U.S. Cities Interest in green roofs (pun
warning) continues to grow, especially in urban centers. Their
benefits, both environmental and aesthetic, include savings on
energy use, thus reducing the impact on global warming
(especially in urban areas), helping to control rain water
runoff thus reducing loads on storm sewage systems, and
providing locally-grown produce to urban markets. “Green roof”
is a general term that includes “white roofs,” those that
reflect sunlight thus saving cooling costs; “blue roofs,” those
that retain water and control runoff; “solar roofs” that heat
water or generate electricity, and “living roofs,” those covered
with soil and planted, a practice that both insulates and
impedes runoff. Living roofs — especially those planted with
edibles — may be the next big thing but the practice is actually
quite old. We recall a diorama at the Nebraska Historical
Society that showed a “soddy,” a home entirely built of sod. As
we remember it, there was even a cow grazing |
2.782295 | 0.858603 | 84 | National Parks Jigsaw and is replicated here as part of the SERC
Pedagogic Service. - Learn about a landscape from a scientific
point of view - Develop a limited expertise in a particular
field - Work with other experts in different fields and learn
from them Context for Use This exercise can be scaled from
introductory level to upper-level, and used in a variety of
classes depending on the roles and the parks selected. I would
give the students at least one class period and a week of
outside time for research in their specialty, then another week
to study their park and produce their web page or pamphlet with
their base group. Description and Teaching Materials First, your
decision about what the students need to learn defines which
parks and which roles to assign. - It may be helpful to give
students of each specialty a list of questions that they should
focus on. For example, if one specialty is "geomorphologist",
the student should research: - Topography and surface geology of
the park - Common soil types |
6.236247 | 1.411204 | 57 | Reader caution -- The quoted April 2, 2012 article by LAWeeky
and NRDC, are hardly what I would consider the most reliable
sources on the planet. BPA, a synthetic compound that mimics
estrogen, is used to harden polycarbonate plastic and to make
protective epoxy resin linings for cans. Plastics marked PC,
"other" or number 7 may contain BPA. Studies have shown that BPA
can leach out of packaging and into foods, especially with
acidic contents like tomatoes.... However Nearly all U.S.
grocery stores (including Trader Joe's and Whole Foods) now
offer a confusing mash-up of products with and without BPA, so
it's best to contact a company's customer relations department
for questions about specific items. , the article goes on to
cite a U. C. Berkley scientist with an interesting point
(emphasis added) -- One problem the food industry faces is
developing safe alternatives to BPA. Dr. Megan Schwarzman, a
family physician and research scientist at the UC Berkeley
School of Public Health, told L.A. Weekly this morni |
4.519869 | -1.252778 | -1 | Beavers Dam Good for Songbirds October 15, 2008 The songbird has
a friend in the beaver. According to a study by the Wildlife
Conservation Society (WCS), the busy beaver’s signature dams
provide critical habitat for a variety of migratory songbirds,
particularly in the semi-arid interior of the West. Researchers
found that through dam building, beavers create ponds and
stimulate growth of diverse streamside vegetation. The study
found that the more dams beavers build, the more abundant and
diverse local songbirds become. The study appears in the October
2008 issue of the journal Western North American Naturalist.
Beaver populations once numbered in the millions in the American
West but dramatically collapsed in the 1800s due to the fur
trade. Today, beavers are often considered pests when they take
down trees and flood property. Their influence is still missing
on most watersheds in the West, yet this study and others
suggest that beavers are very important to wildlife and to
reviving the natural function of |
9.843141 | 2.408336 | -1 | Splinter hemorrhages are small areas of bleeding (hemorrhage)
under the fingernails or toenails. Splinter hemorrhages look
like thin, red to reddish-brown lines of blood under the nails.
They run in the direction of nail growth. They are named
splinter hemorrhages because they look like a splinter under the
fingernail. The hemorrhages may be caused by tiny clots that
damage the small capillaries under the nails. Splinter
hemorrhages can occur with infection of the heart valves
(endocarditis). They may be caused by vessel damage from
swelling of the blood vessels (vasculitis) or tiny clots that
damage the small capillaries (microemboli). - Bacterial
endocarditis - Injury to the nail There is no specific care for
splinter hemorrhages. Follow your health care provider's
instructions for treating endocarditis. Call your health care
provider if Contact your health care provider if: - You notice
splinter hemorrhages and you haven't had any recent injury to
the nail Note: Splinter hemorrhages usually appear late in |
0.950272 | 3.353834 | 20 | Luther's daring initiative thoughts did indeed come from above,
but he owed them to no man or age. —Junius B. Remensnyder, What
the World Owes Luther, 1917 Many writers maintain that there is
a rule of International Law forbidding the commencement of war
without a declaration of war. But such rule, in fact, does not
exist, for a great many wars take place without an initiative
declaration of war. —Lassa Oppenheim, International Law, 1906 If
you want to meet her, you're going to have to take the
initiative and introduce yourself. The company has the
opportunity to seize the initiative by getting its new products
to the market before its competitors. The governor has proposed
a new initiative to improve conditions in urban schools. … on
the day before their Club Med flight she took the initiative of
telephoning Franco from work, ostensibly to tell him that she
had really admired his new place … —John Barth, Atlantic, March
1995 Following initiatives begun before the First World War,
thirty-four states institute |
2.005593 | 6.513021 | -1 | Good afternoon, you're in Econopolis! We're going to learn about
opportunity cost today. Opportunity cost is the process of
choosing one good or service over another. The item that you
don't pick is the opportunity cost. Even though you might not
realize it, you use opportunity cost every single day. Here is
an example: I went to Clothes Express and saw a really cool
shirt, then I went to Pants Plaza and saw some cool pants. The
shirt was 10.00 dollars and the pants were 15.00 dollars. In all
that is 25.00 dollars. I only have 20.00 dollars. If I pick the
shirt, then the pants are my opportunity cost. can also be a
choice about what you do during the day. A good example is: My
friends and I have one day off to do anything we want. We've
decided to either go to the movies or shopping. We decided to go
to the movies instead of going shopping. The opportunity cost
was going Now we're going to play a game to see what you have
learned. You have just won $150.00!!!!!! Pick out your prizes
out of the list below. But |
-2.705699 | 2.428278 | 4 | The wheel of time or wheel of history is a concept in several
religions and philosophies, notably religions of Indian origin
such as Buddhism and Hinduism, which regard time as cyclical and
consisting of repeating ages. Many other notable cultures also
believe in this Wheel of Time: notably, the Q'ero Indians in
Peru who are the direct descendants of the Incan empire, as well
as the Hopi Indians of Arizona, believe in this cyclical idea of
time. - See Kalachakra for details. The Wheel of Time or
Kalachakra is a Tantric deity that is associated with Tibetan
Tantric Buddhism , which encompasses all four main schools of
Sakya , and is especially important within the lesser-known
Jonang The Kalachakra tantra prophecies a world within which
(religious) conflict is prevalent. A worldwide war will be waged
which will see the expansion of the mystical Kingdom of
Shambhala led by a messianical king. The "wheel of time" is a
reference to the clockwork of modern magicians, a euphemism for
the wheels and cogs of older cl |
2.145138 | 4.125422 | -1 | "theft" French translation Can we draw a comparison between this
and the theft in the employment insurance- This is another
disguised theft the Liberal government is preparing to commit.
Words such as ``theft'' and ``stealing'' should not be used in
the House of Commons. - Copy of the company's fire, theft and
general liability insurance policy, Moreover, there would be
fewer opportunities for diversion, theft and loss. These people
had been accused of offences ranging from petty theft to
aircraft hijacking. If apprehended for petty theft or other
crimes, the children were held in detention centres often in
inhuman conditions. The Bureau does not draw a clear distinction
in its reports between an incident of petty theft, armed robbery
or piracy. The officer had insulted, threatened and manhandled a
Russian national while arresting him for theft. IMO in its
reports distinguishes between piracy and armed robbery, but not
between petty theft and armed robbery (see para. Murder,
robbery, theft, rape, kidnapping, |
2.463723 | 5.230938 | 43 | New national science standards that make the teaching of global
warming part of the public school curriculum are slated to be
released this month, potentially ending an era in which climate
skepticism has been allowed to seep into the nation's
classrooms. The Next Generation Science Standards were developed
by the National Research Council, the National Science Teachers
Association, the American Association for the Advancement of
Science, the nonprofit Achieve and more than two dozen states.
The latest draft recommends that educators teach the evidence
for man-made climate change starting as early as elementary
school and incorporate it into all science classes, ranging from
earth science to chemistry. By eighth grade, students should
understand that "human activities, such as the release of
greenhouse gases from burning fossil fuels, are major factors in
the current rise in Earth’s mean surface temperature (global
warming)," the standards say. They're "revolutionary," said Mark
McCaffrey, programs and policy |
7.820083 | 5.157845 | -1 | Three new studies confirm the roles of two long-suspected
factors in the development and perpetuation of ALS. Inflammation
is a set of biochemical changes brought about by the immune
system, while oxidative stress occurs when an excess of
electrically charged, oxygen-containing molecules damage DNA and
other cellular substances. Robert Brown, director of the MDA/ALS
Center at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, was among
the authors of a study of inflammation published in the Jan. 15
issue of Physiological Genomics. The researchers looked at
postmortem samples of spinal cord tissue. They found a definite
"pro-inflammatory state" in the ALS tissue compared with samples
from people who didn’t have ALS. They also found that genes
involved in the inflammatory process in ALS were selectively
activated. (This finding doesn’t imply anything is wrong with
the structure of the genes; it means they’re "turned on" because
of the inflammatory process instead of being in their usual
"turned off" condition.) Stanley |
-1.353206 | -1.755739 | 34 | A major area of research in X-ray astronomy is the accretion of
matter on to black holes and neutron stars in the context of AGN
and galactic X-ray binaries. Accretion is an energetic process
and can give high luminosities. During the epoch of reionization
the first stars and black holes in the Universe (re-) ionized
the Intergalactic Medium. Studying the epoch of reionization
will tell us about the first galaxies. Observations of nearby
galaxies and high-redshift quasars suggest that black holes are
present in the majority of galaxies. The first quasars harbor
already black holes as massive as several billion solar masses.
The intergalactic medium (IGM) and not galaxies contain most of
the baryons (e.g. H, He, C, N, O) in the Universe. We use
spectroscopic observations of high redshift backgound quasars to
study this material. |
-0.542951 | 2.825745 | 52 | Shanna Riley April 7th, 2007 Embalming a body for transient
preservation is an archaic practice that can be traced back to
the ancient Egyptians - and was used perhaps even before. Though
the methods have changed somewhat, the idea of bodily
preservation by removing the fluids and replacing them with
chemicals (natural or unnatural) has remained the same. The
practice of embalming bodies for viewing or burial has no roots
in any particular religion. Indeed, some religions - orthodox
Jewish and Muslim, for example - prohibit embalming as it is
considered a desecration of the body. The practice of embalming
only came into common use after the Civil War in the United
States. In 1861, Dr. Thomas Holmes, injected the bodies of slain
soldiers with a mixture of arsenic and water; the intention
being to preserve them for the journey home so that they could
be buried by family members. Arsenic was the choice ingredient
in embalming fluids until around 1910, when it was decided to
pose too much of a health risk. Today, |